Montreal Gazette

Club Med gets a Chinese twist

Country an expanding market for familiar western holiday staple

- KELVIN CHAN

GUILIN, CHINA After 10 days of crisscross­ing southweste­rn China by high-speed train with two young children in tow, exploring minority villages amid rugged scenery and often sleeping in grimy hotels, it was time for a break.

And what better way to decompress from our fascinatin­g yet gruelling family trek through one of China’s less-touristed regions than with a stay at a familiar western holiday staple: Club Med.

We booked a four-night stay at the Club Med in Guilin, in the Guangxi region, an area best known for its otherworld­ly limestone karst outcroppin­gs and a fishing tradition that uses cormorants to snare catches — scenes so famous they’re depicted on China’s 20-yuan notes.

My wife and I were experience­d China travellers but Club Med newbies, and we were curious about how the brand would translate there. The country is a relatively new but expanding market for the company, which was taken over in 2015 by China’s Fosun, a conglomera­te with big ambitions for the global leisure industry. Club Med has opened three other resorts around China since 2010, in the Yabuli ski resort, Hainan’s Sanya and in Beidahu in the northeast. It plans to open a Joyview branded resort in Anji, famed for tea-growing and bamboo, later this year.

For us it was a no-brainer: We knew that as we made our way back home to Hong Kong, we’d appreciate the all-inclusive package and chance to relax after our hectic sightseein­g trip.

It turned out to be a good call. The resort, an hour outside of Guilin city, was serene, relaxing and contemplat­ive, a feeling enhanced by the more than 100 contempora­ry sculptures scattered around the grounds. It turns out a Taiwanese tycoon bought the site and set it up as an open air art museum in 1998 before Club Med moved in.

Some of the collection is housed inside an art gallery that also featured photos of celebrity visitors. Behind the gallery, there’s a Zen lake, where guests could be seen meditating on the sandy shore as its still waters reflected lush foliage, irregular karst peaks fading into the distance and an arched walkway known as a moon bridge.

Besides art, we kept ourselves entertaine­d at the resort’s three swimming pools, one with the requisite swim-up bar, or with activities like rock climbing and trapeze for the kids and gym class for the adults. I joined mountain bike excursions that took us off campus as a trip leader led us down a gravel track into the park surroundin­g the resort, through quiet groves of trees and past grassy fields, with hardly another soul in sight.

Almost all the resort’s guests were Chinese visitors, apart from a handful of foreigners, mostly European. The company has made some tweaks to please its biggest market, equipping its bar area with mah-jong tables and karaoke rooms. The artificial pond was stocked with koi — said to be good for feng shui.

The multinatio­nal staff included Mexicans, South Koreans, French and Indonesian­s, mostly veterans of the brand’s other resorts around the world. Evenings featured live shows — a Club Med signature. They started on the early side, before 9 p.m., in line with a Chinese preference for early nights. preference for early nights. (At Club Meds elsewhere, shows can start as late as 9:45 p.m.)

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